Programs : Program Course Equivalency Search

This form will search this institution's course database. You can use the results of this search to select a course and find programs that offer foreign course equivalents.

This is a historical listing of courses Penn State students have taken in past semesters. It is meant to be a guide as to what courses might be available and how they might transfer to Penn State. Courses listed here may not be offered during the semester you attend the program and the credit amount or course title may have changed. Additional courses not on this list may also be available. Please reference the host institution’s website to plan courses for your semester abroad. This historical course list is for Dept Schreyer: Freiburg, University College Freiburg.

Abroad Course Number

Abroad Course Title

PSU Credits

PSU Course Number

Semester Effective

Notes

00LE62S-LAS-LS0007

Anatomy and Function of the Brain

3.00

BIOL 399

Spring 2016

No Abroad Course Number

Comparative Welfare State Analysis

4.00

PL SC 499

Spring 2015

N/A

Dealing with Ethnic Diversity

3.00

PL SC 499

Spring 2016

NA

Earth Sciences

3.00

GEOSC 020

Spring 2015

N/A

German Language and Culture B2.1

2.00

GER299

Spring 2015

none

Ideologies

3.00

PL SC 499

Spring 2015

No Abroad Course Number

International Human Rights: Regimes and Institutions

4.00

PL SC 499

Spring 2015

00LE62S-LAS-GO0009

Legal Perspectives on the European Union

3.00

PLSC 499

Spring 2016

N/A

Political Order and Violence

3.00

PL SC 499

Spring 2016

NA

Principles of Economincs

3.00

ECON 199

Spring 2015

00LE62S-LAS-CH0016

Quid est tempus? The Reckoning of Time During the Middle Ages

3.00

HIST 199

Spring 2016

00LE62S-LAS-CHGO0012

Religion in the Process of Modernization

3.00

RL ST 197

Spring 2016

N/A

Religion in the Process of Modernization

3.00

RL ST 197

Spring 2016

00LE62S-LAS-CH0009

Space And Modernity

3.00

HIST 199

Spring 2016

00LE62S-LAS-CH0018

The Making of the Silk Road: Ancient Empires, Economies, and the Foundations of World History